QUIGLEY,
Lane: KUSC,
1969-73. Lane hosted the "Memory Lane Show" every Sunday night at
KUSC, playing music from rock's early years. The show was
all-request and featured pre-Beatles oldies with lots of r&b from
the early 1950s.

Lane was born July 12, 1949 and
graduated from Fairfax High School, San Fernando Valley State
College (now CSUN) and Loyola Law School. “I have been interested in
music and radio for as long as I can remember. My dad had been
a moderately successful musician in the big band days, but I never
inherited any of his musical talent. Therefore, my love of music was
expressed in record collecting, which began on my sixth birthday
when I asked for (and received) a Victrola and a copy of Rock Around The Clock. Today,
my collection of oldies on vinyl and CD numbers around 20,000. I
decided early on that formatted radio was not for me, so I have
concentrated on what I love - specialized programs featuring the
great stuff from the fifties and sixties that's generally forgotten
or ignored by oldies programmers. The Memory Lane Show has
been around intermittently since the late 60's, and today can be
heard on rockitradio.net.”

Lane is now a practicing lawyer in Los
Angeles.

QUIGLEY,
Paxton: KMPC/KTZN,
1996-97, KMPC (1540/The Ticket), 2003-04. The self-defense guru to
15 million women hosted a weekly show on AM 710/KTZN. "The Paxton
Quigley Empowerment Hour"dealt with personal
reliance and responsibility for women of all ages and the men in
their lives who really and truly care. Her book Armed & Female
is known as the "bible of women's gun self-defense."She has also written
Not an Easy Target and Stayin' Alive.

Born in Chicago, Paxton is a divorced
mother of two with a master's degree in anthropology from the
University of Chicago.

"I was anti-gun until one night a friend phoned and tearfully told
me she had been followed home, attacked and viciously raped by
apredator. As I drove her to a hospital I learned that she’d had
several opportunities during the ordeal to defend herself – if only
she’d had something to defend herself with. But she didn’t – no
self-defense spray, no mini-baton, no gun. Her condition was so
horrendous that right then and there, I made up my mind — this was
NOT EVER going to happen to me," Paxton writes at her blog.

She
became a national advocate for women's empowerment and has been on over 300
tv and radio shows. She's taught security tactics (with and without guns) to
thousands of women and couples in her seminars.

Paxton was Yoko Ono’s bodyguard
and security consultant to high-profile individuals, including Hollywood
actresses. In 2016, she published She's Got Grit, a thriller with
lots of sex who becomes a rogue bodyguard, working with an ex-CIA agent.

QUILLIN, Ted:
KFWB, 1958-61; KRLA, 1962-64;
KEZY, 1966-68; KFI, 1969; KFOX, 1969-71;
XPRS, 1972. Ted was one
of the original KFWB Color Radio/Channel 98 jocks from 1958, died April 20,
2011. He had been in ill health for a number of years. He was 81. In
addition to three years at KFWB, T.Q. was a veteran from KRLA, KEZY, KFI,
KFOX and XPRS. T.Q.’s mantra was look out for
"Blue Skies and Green Lights." Ted had been living in Las Vegas.
Chuck Blore, the iconic legend who
launched KFWB, said, “Ted used to work the midnight shift in the beginning.
He would play a lot of Sinatra records between 2 and 4 a.m. when nobody was
listening. We had a music policy that could be broken every now and then but
not as much as Ted was doing. One night there’s a knock at the door at
KFWB. It was a pizza man announcing a delivery from Frank. Ted asked, “Who
Frank?” The delivery guy said, ‘Sinatra.’ He told me about it the next
morning and I asked why he was playing all that Sinatra music but that’s my
favorite Quillin story. All the other guys worked three hours and he had a
six-hour shift, so I gave him a little lee-way.”

Born on February 17, 1930,
in Oklahoma City, he left Oklahoma City when he was 13 and lived in Denver,
Lubbock and El Paso before graduating from the Texas College of Mines and
Metallurgy (now UTEP). It was at KELP-El Paso that his fortunes leapfrogged
him to California.

"During the all-night time, Chuck didn't listen too
closely, so I flavored the rock music with lots of blues; in fact, I called
it Blues for Breakfast," said Ted when interviewed for Los Angeles
Radio People. It was during this time that Ted and Ritchie Valens became
good friends, with Ted becoming sort of a big brother/consultant to Ritchie.
When Elvis got out of the Army, KFWB wanted to bring him to the L.A.
Coliseum, and they asked Ted to help since, Ted knew Elvis. "I was given a
certified check in the amount of $100,000 and flew to Memphis. I hung out
with Elvis for four days at Graceland. Colonel Parker wasn't sure if Elvis
would perform, but we had a good time in Memphis with Elvis.

"By 1972, Ted was, as he put it, "at the
intersection of walk and don't walk. I had to get out of the fast lane."
During his time in L.A. he appeared in many Warner Bros. tv series. Ted
settled for a slower lane in Las Vegas and immediately went to work at KORK,
where he was the morning star on radio and host of the afternoon tv movie.
He eventually opened his own advertising agency, which he ran for 20 years.
He taught “The History of Advertising and Communication” for years at Las
Vegas City College. His communication motivation seminars were successful
for decades: "Learn one magic trick that will change your life, personally
and financially, forever.” Always optimistic, T.Q. summed up his life,
saying, "The road to success is always under construction."

(John Quinlan, and Leo Quinones)

Quimby,
Crys: KNX, 1985-94;
KFWB, 1996-2003. Crys was named program director at WCBS-New York in the
early Fall of 2003 and left in early 2008 during a massive CBS Radio
downsizing. She is now National Director of Programming for News Source
(formerly Metro Source News). She has been in
broadcast news since 1980. Crys started at KNX in 1985 as a writer/editor.
In 1995, she went to WBBM-Chicago as a producer/editor, writer and reporter.
She also did freelance writing for KCBS/Channel 2 and KTLA/Channel 5. She
was a segment producer/writer for Crimewatch Tonight, a syndicated
television news magazine.
Quinlan, John:
KTLK, 2005-12. John is Sr. RVP Sales - Western Region Total Traffic &
Weather Network.

(Johnny Quest, Crys Quimby, and Sergio Quintana)

QUINN, Louis:
KLAC, 1959-60. Louis, a veteran of the music format
at KLAC, died September 14, 1988, of lung cancer. He was 73.

He was best known as an actor, appearing in All the President's
Men. Louis was in a series of tv shows, probably best known for
his role as Roscoe from 1958-63 in 77 Sunset Strip. He
guest starred in The Alaskans, Batman, The
Virginian and The Donna Reed Show.

Quinn began
his career as a radio personality, hosting variety shows and writing
comedy for Milton Berle and Don McNeill's Breakfast Club.

Quinn, Tony: KGFJ, 1965;
KCRW, 1973-75. Since forced retirement in 2005 due to poor health, he's been
a full-time missionary worldwide. He's an on-line minister, preacher,
teacher and counselor at the Tony Hopper Ministries International.
Quinones, Leo: KIIS, 1988-98; KLSX,
1998-2009; KABC, 2009; KFWB, 2010-15. Leo is the Film Freak and he hosted an entertainment show on
FREE/fm, KLSX until a format flip to AMP RADIO on 2.20.09. He hosted a
weekend show at KFWB until a format flip to Sports.Quintana,
Sergio: KFWB, 2004. Sergio works in news in Florida.Quirm, Herman: KMET, 1968-69. Herman worked
morning drive at KMET. Unknown.